Ahkmatova, Krakaw, Polen 2005
Silbergelatine Abzug, Master Print
30 x 45 cm auf 40 x 50 cm Blatt
Ed 1 von 15
Ania, Warsaw 2014
gescanntes Polaroid, Pigmentprint auf Japanpapier
100 x 100 cm
Ed. 2 von 7
Cabbagetown Atlanta 1998
Silbergelatine Abzug Master Print
100 x 100 cm
Ed. 7
Calcutta 2018
Silbergelatine Abzug
11 x 27 cm auf 30 x 40 cm Blatt
Ed. 15 Kopie
Horse, Calcutta 2018
Silbergelatine Abzug, master Print, 41 x 40 cm
Ed. 2/15
Hotel, Lodz, Polen 2008
Silbergelatine Abzug, Master Print
40 x 40 cm
Ed. 1/15
Katowice 2002
Silbergelatine Abzug, Master Print
29,5 x 44 cm
Ed. 2/15
Monkey, Varanasi, Indien 2018
Silbergelatine Abzug, Master Print
40 x 40 cm
Ed. 2/15
Myslowice, Polen 2004
Silbergelatine Abzug, Master Print
30 x 44 cm auf 40 x 50 cm
Ed. 2/15
New York City 2004
Silbergelatine Abzug, Masterprint
31 x 44 cm
Ed. 7/15
Paris 2000
Silbergelatine Abzug Master Print
30 x 40 cm
R and j, Warschau, Polen 2015
Silbergelatine Abzug, master Print
32,5 x 32,5 cm (auf 40 x 50 cm Blatt)
Ed. 1/15
Warsaw, Poland 2008
Siblergelatine Master Print
29,5 x 43 cm
Ed. 4/15
1967 | Born in Tel Aviv |
Current | Lives and works in Berlin |
2009 | Prix SCAM Roger Pic |
1999 | Nadar Award for his book End Time City |
Best Documentary, End Time City, Photo-eye, 1999 | |
1998 | Infinity Award for Young Photographer de l’ICP New-York |
2020 | Michael Ackerman, Van der Grinten Galerie, Cologne / DE |
2017 | Festival Foto Leggendo, Rom / IT |
Watermark, Leica galerie, Milan/ IT | |
2016 | Diary of a Job - Olympus Carte Blanche, Les Rencontres Photographiques d'Arles / FR |
2015 | The Phos Center, Torino Italy Kunstwerk, Vienna / AT |
L’Oeil Urbain, Corbeil-Essonnes / FR | |
“Sing Another Song Boys” (with Lorenzo Castore) Rome / IT | |
2014 | MC2 Gallery, Milan, Italy Foto Istanbul /TR |
L’intuition – projection avec la collaboration du musicien Vincent Courtois, curator : Christian Caujolle. A La Friche Belle de Mai, Marseille, Le Lux Scene national de Valence, Festival Banlieues Blues, Paris et Les Rencontres Photographiques d’Arles | |
2012 | Argus Foto Kunst, Berlin / DE |
2010 | Half Life, Crac Languedoc-Roussillon, Festival Images Singulières, Sète / FR |
Half Life, Stimultania, Strasbourg / FR | |
2009 | Half Life, Rencontres d’Arles (screening) / FR |
Half Life, Le 104, Paris (screening) / FR | |
2007 | Fotofestival, Mannheim, Ludwigshafen and Heidelberg / DE |
2006 | Camelot Gallery, Krakow / PL |
Rencontres Internationales de la Photographie d’Arles / FR | |
Fotografie am Schiffbauerdamm, Berlin / DE | |
Van Der Grinten Galerie, Cologne / DE | |
FAS Galerie, Berlin / DE | |
2005 | Hermès Gallery, New York / USA |
2004 | Michael Ackerman, Galerie VU’, Paris / FR |
Kerrigan Campbell Art+Project, New York / USA | |
2001 | Michael Ackerman, Galerie VU’, Paris / FR |
2000 | Scalo Gallery, Zurich / CH |
Argos Photography Festival, Vevey / CH | |
Foksal, Nyon / CH | |
Atelier De Visu Marseille / FR |
2018 | Eyes Wide Open - Le Botanique, Bruxelles / BE |
2017 | Etranger Résident - La colllection de Marin Karmitz, Maison Rouge, Paris / FR |
On the Paths of Enlightenment, MASI, Lugano / CH | |
2016 | Das Licht Der Nacht, Kommunale Galerie Berlin / DE |
2015 | Lianzou Photo Festival, Chine |
2013 | Images et Musiques, MEP, Paris / FR |
2012 | Nacht, Hotel Bogota, Photoplatz, Berlin / DE |
Delpire & CO, The gallery at Hermès, NY, EU | |
2011 | New Yorker Fiction/Real Photography, Steven Kasher Gallery, NY, EU |
2009 | Rencontres de la Photographie, Arles / FR |
Darkside II, Fotomuseum, Winterthur / USA | |
2007 | Festival Transfotografia, Fundacja Transfotografia, Gdansk, PL |
2006 | Points de VU’, Jeu de Paume, Tours / FR |
2005 | Fast Forward, Centro Cultural Conde Duque, ES |
2004 | The Dark Room, GEM MoCA, Den Haag, NL |
Acquisitions récentes, MEP, Paris / FR | |
Rencontres de la Photographie, Arles / FR | |
2003 | Uniques, Galerie VU’, Paris / FR |
2000 | Positions Attitudes Actions, Foto Biënnale, Rotterdam / NL |
Born in Israel in1967, Michael Ackerman moved with his family to New York in 1974. At 18 he discovered photography as a personal form of expression and truly came into his own in the art. He left his college studies behind and has devoted himself with utter dedication to his photographic work ever since. In 1992, Ackerman embarked on an extended journey that took him from Manila to Calcutta and on to Varanasi, the holy city of Hinduism, home of the terraced Ganges riverbank where both ritual baths and religious cremations are carried out by the thousands, virtually side-by-side. In 1997, after extensive travels, the work on what would be ‘End Time City’ was completed. Published two years later by Delpire in Paris, the book subsequently received the prestigious Prix Nadar.
The pursuit of “the story” that could have established Ackerman as a conventional photojournalist was relinquished in favor of a work method that brought the naturally retiring photographer into direct confrontation with an inner agitation, a friction between reticence and unrestrained curiosity, which is perhaps the delicate balance of intimacy and distance that connects him what he sees.The thread of Ackerman’s sensibility for time and timelessness, for his own history and the historically charged quality of places has been woven through his work from the start.
His utterly non-academic work with the photo camera has brought Ackerman highest acclaim: his purposeful use of exposure errors, overexposure, blurriness and movement serves, in effect, to conquer the coldness and rigidity of technology, giving the floor to the unbridled expression of the image. Younger generations of photographers regularly acknowledge Michael Ackerman among their greatest influences.
Viewing his images it is impossible to escape the pull of their extraordinary intensity. In addition to earlier works from India, New York and Eastern Europe our show also presents the most recent photographs and assemblages, images that Michael Ackerman took at the Warsaw Jewish Cemetery. Michael Ackerman has travelled the world in search of existential human expression also finding it at the place of his own family provenance, revealed in perhaps the most delicate, fragile form possible: images of the little weathered portrait photos of children at the Warsaw cemetery. Like a muffled scream that, through Ackerman’s work, now echoes into the present after all.
Michael Ackerman received the New York City’s International Center of Photography (ICP) Infinity Award in 1998 and the Nadar Award for his book ‘End Time City’ (Delpire, 1999). His work ‘Departure, Poland’ was honored with the SCAM Roger Pic Award in 2009. Ackerman’s much-talked-about book ‘Fiction’ appeared in 2001, his most recent book ‘Half Life’ in 2010, both published by Delpire.
Since 2010 Michael Ackerman has been based in Berlin.
—
Born in Israel in1967, Michael Ackerman moved with his family to New York in 1974. At 18 he discovered photography as a personal form of expression and truly came into his own in the art. He left his college studies behind and has devoted himself with utter dedication to his photographic work ever since. In 1992, Ackerman embarked on an extended journey that took him from Manila to Calcutta and on to Varanasi, the holy city of Hinduism, home of the terraced Ganges riverbank where both ritual baths and religious cremations are carried out by the thousands, virtually side-by-side. In 1997, after extensive travels, the work on what would be ‘End Time City’ was completed. Published two years later by Delpire in Paris, the book subsequently received the prestigious Prix Nadar.
The pursuit of “the story” that could have established Ackerman as a conventional photojournalist was relinquished in favor of a work method that brought the naturally retiring photographer into direct confrontation with an inner agitation, a friction between reticence and unrestrained curiosity, which is perhaps the delicate balance of intimacy and distance that connects him what he sees.The thread of Ackerman’s sensibility for time and timelessness, for his own history and the historically charged quality of places has been woven through his work from the start.
His utterly non-academic work with the photo camera has brought Ackerman highest acclaim: his purposeful use of exposure errors, overexposure, blurriness and movement serves, in effect, to conquer the coldness and rigidity of technology, giving the floor to the unbridled expression of the image. Younger generations of photographers regularly acknowledge Michael Ackerman among their greatest influences.
Viewing his images it is impossible to escape the pull of their extraordinary intensity. In addition to earlier works from India, New York and Eastern Europe our show also presents the most recent photographs and assemblages, images that Michael Ackerman took at the Warsaw Jewish Cemetery. Michael Ackerman has travelled the world in search of existential human expression also finding it at the place of his own family provenance, revealed in perhaps the most delicate, fragile form possible: images of the little weathered portrait photos of children at the Warsaw cemetery. Like a muffled scream that, through Ackerman’s work, now echoes into the present after all.
Michael Ackerman received the New York City’s International Center of Photography (ICP) Infinity Award in 1998 and the Nadar Award for his book ‘End Time City’ (Delpire, 1999). His work ‘Departure, Poland’ was honored with the SCAM Roger Pic Award in 2009. Ackerman’s much-talked-about book ‘Fiction’ appeared in 2001, his most recent book ‘Half Life’ in 2010, both published by Delpire.
Since 2010 Michael Ackerman has been based in Berlin.